Defendant suspended plaintiff Jamshidnejad from middle school for four days after an allegedly disruptive occurrence involving offensive petitions.1 Plaintiff then brought this action, claiming “outrageous conduct” and violations of various constitutional rights under 42 USC section 1983.2 The trial court granted defendant’s motion for summary judgment. Plaintiff appeals, assigning error only to the trial court’s grant of summary judgment as to the constitutional claims, and defendant cross-appeals, assigning error to the trial court’s denial of its motion for enhanced prevailing party fees. Only one issue merits discussion: plaintiff’s claim for damages based on an asserted violation of his free speech rights. On that issue, we reverse and remand. In light of that disposition, the cross-appeal is moot and we therefore dismiss it. On all other claims at issue in the appeal, we affirm.
The relevant undisputed facts are as follows. In March 2001, when plaintiff was an eighth-grade student at Riley Creek Middle School in Curry County, his principal, Denning, discovered a number of petitions. One sought the firing of Denning and another declared that Denning was “gay.” A third petition, the subject of plaintiffs free speech claim, declared that a teacher at the school, Ms. Weinhold, was “the devil.” Although it is undisputed that plaintiff was present when the “devil petition” was created and that he wrote a list of synonyms for “devil,” the extent of any other participation by him in its creation, if any, is unclear from the record. The principal drafter of the petition was plaintiffs *516schoolmate, J. Plaintiff wrote the list of synonyms for “devil” on a page that is separate from the petition itself; the petition does not contain any of the synonyms; and we cannot discern whether or not the list was circulated with the petition.
After Denning discovered the “devil petition,” he showed it to Weinhold, who became upset and left school. Several students whose names appeared on the petitions were questioned, and some stated that they had been coerced into signing. Plaintiff denied participating in any coercion, although he stated that he was present when the petitions were circulated. After an investigation, the Gold Beach Police Department concluded that plaintiff was involved in creating the petitions and in asking or coercing others to sign them.
On March 19, 2001, Denning met with plaintiff, plaintiffs father, and the investigating officer to discuss the petitions. At the end of the conversation, Denning suspended plaintiff from school for the rest of that week, which consisted of the four days preceding the upcoming spring break. Denning reported that many students were upset by the effect of the petition on Weinhold and blamed plaintiff. He advised that plaintiff should stay away from school for his own safety. Plaintiff complied. A transcript of the meeting also indicates that Denning discussed his concern about plaintiffs alleged involvement in creating the petitions and about reports that plaintiff coerced students into signing them.3
Plaintiff brought this action under 42 USC section 1983 against the school district, its superintendent, and Denning for infringement of his rights to due process, equal protection, and free speech under the federal constitution; for “outrageous conduct,” by which we assume that he meant intentional infliction of emotional distress; and for “denial of free public education.” After the court dismissed plaintiffs claims, defendant moved for an enhanced prevailing party fee. The court denied that claim.
*517In arguing the First Amendment issue — the only issue on appeal that merits discussion — the parties cited relevant federal cases involving free speech in schools4 but focused their legal analysis on whether or not plaintiffs speech dealt with a “matter of public concern,” and it was on that basis that the trial court decided in favor of defendants: “I think I can assume, basically, [counsel], all the facts that you’re claiming here and the free speech that we’re talking about here was not a matter of public concern.” The trial court subsequently granted defendant’s motion for summary judgment on all claims and denied defendant’s motion for prevailing party fees.
The parties’ arguments and the court’s rationale presume an entirely erroneous interpretation of the First Amendment, namely, that it protects speech regarding matters of public concern and nothing more. It is true that, in one case, Connick v. Myers, 461 US 138, 146, 103 S Ct 1684, 75 L Ed 2d 708 (1983), the Court held that a public employer committed no First Amendment violation by firing a public employee who, in her capacity as such, expressed herself on a matter of purely private concern. That is a far cry from an exhaustive statement of the First Amendment’s scope. In fact, the Court immediately added:
“We do not suggest, however, that [the employee’s] speech, even if not touching upon a matter of public concern, is totally beyond the protection of the First Amendment. ‘The First Amendment does not protect speech and assembly only to the extent it can be characterized as political. “Great secular causes, with smaller ones, are guarded.” ’ United Mine Workers v. Illinois State Bar Association, 389 U.S. 217, 223, 88 S. Ct. 353, 356, 19 L. Ed. 2d 426 (1967), quoting Thomas v. Collins, 323 U.S. 516, 531, 65 S. Ct. 315, 323, 89 L. Ed. 430 (1945). We in no sense suggest that speech on private matters falls into one of the narrow and well-defined classes of expression which carries so little social value, such as obscenity, that the State can prohibit and punish such expression by all persons in its jurisdiction.”
*518Connick, 461 US at 147. Thus, the First Amendment has long protected offensive artistic speech, FCC v. Pacifica Foundation, 438 US 726, 98 S Ct 3026, 57 L Ed 2d 1073 (1978); semi-nude dancing, Barnes v. Glen Theatre, Inc., 501 US 560, 111 S Ct 2456, 115 L Ed 2d 504 (1991); personal invective short of “fighting words,” Gooding v. Wilson, 405 US 518, 92 S Ct 1103, 31L Ed 2d 408 (1972); advertising, Virginia Pharmacy Board v. Virginia Citizens Consumer Council, Inc., 425 US 748, 96 S Ct 1817, 48 L Ed 2d 346 (1976); and a host of other forms of expression having no relationship to matters of public concern beyond the public concern generated by government’s attempt to stifle it.
The fact that the court reached its decision based on an erroneous rationale, however, does not mean that we must reverse. We can affirm nonetheless if we can determine from the record that the court was “right for the wrong reason.” Outdoor Media Dimensions Inc. v. State of Oregon, 331 Or 634, 659, 20 P3d 180 (2001). In the present case, that means that we may affirm if, on de novo review of the record, we find undisputed assertions of material fact that would compel the conclusion that plaintiff was either suspended for reasons unrelated to speech; or that, if he was suspended for speech, it was unprotected speech because it was disruptive or potentially disruptive. ORCP 47 C; Pangle v. Bend-LaPine School District, 169 Or App 376, 10 P3d 275 (2000), rev den, 332 Or 558 (2001).5 We conclude that, on the record as it now exists, disputed questions of fact exist with respect to each of the theories that might support affirmance.
We begin with the question of why plaintiff was suspended. Tautologically, if he was suspended for reasons apart from speech, then his First Amendment claim must fail. Defendant argues that the purpose of the suspension was not to punish plaintiff for his contribution to the petitions but to *519protect him from retaliation by his fellow students and to punish him for coercive acts.
We note initially that, even if the purpose was to protect plaintiff from retaliation for speech, that fact does not insulate defendant from liability under the First Amendment. If the speech was lawful, then defendant has an obligation to protect the speaker and cannot meet that obligation by silencing or punishing him. Gregory v. City of Chicago, 394 US 111, 120-21, 89 S Ct 946, 22 L Ed 2d 134 (1969) (Black, J., concurring). Thus, the question whether defendant sent plaintiff home for his own protection collapses into the question whether the speech was itself lawful, which we address below.
The transcript of the March 19 meeting among plaintiff, plaintiffs father, Denning, and a police officer indicates that Denning suspended plaintiff for several reasons, one of which was reported coercion.
“And also we’re seriously looking at the ones that ahh we’ve got four or five well three or four students that are saying that they were threatened. In other words, you sign this or we’re going to beat you up. And they named [plaintiff and J], I, I think are the two that threatened and so that’s what we’re going to be talking to them this morning to get, we want to get the truth. There’s a lot of rumors and things going around and that’s why we’re calling the kids in one by one and we’re letting parents be here if they want to be part of it. We’re trying to find the truth.”
The transcript also contains the following exchange between Denning and plaintiffs father concerning whether plaintiff was being sent home for coercing other students into signing the petition:
“[Denning:] Okay and also there were the — kids were saying that [plaintiff] threatened them and so ...
“[Plaintiffs father:] That’s the part he’s saying he did indicate willing to take even though I told might even have to even take lie detector test.
“[Denning:] Ahh ha.
“[Plaintiffs father:] I’m not, I’m just trying to be fair.
*520“[Denning:] Yeah, well I understand and that’s what we’re what we’re trying to be to [sic]. We’re going to be calling all the kids in today. We’ve got a list of fifteen names and we’re going to call them in and do the same thing with them, call their parents. It’s going to take a while though. And so we’re going to find out exactly what happened but we did talk to them after the meeting on Friday and ahh they specifically said [plaintiff] and [J] threatened them. An and different people at different times said that. So that’s what we have to find out and get them on tape because maybe their stories will change. Ahh when it comes down to it when its being interviewed by a police officer. And that’s what we want to find out. And if [plaintiff] you know we could change the consequence if we find out he didn’t threaten anybody then it would change everything completely. But right now we’ve got kids that are telling us that he did threaten them and that’s what we want to find out and get to the bottom of it.”
That exchange supports Denning’s contention that he sent plaintiff home based at least in part on reports of threatening behavior. Plaintiff, however, contends that he was suspended due to his role in creating the petition, and that theory is supported by numerous statements by Denning at the same meeting:
“[I’m punishing plaintiff and J] right now and then if we find out anyone else wrote [the petitions] then it will be the same thing for them. We’ve got kids lined up to talk to all morning today. So it’s [plaintiff] and [J] right now and possibly more later. Ahh the kids that signed willingly they’re going to miss a few recesses or something ahh but the ones that wrote the petition are the ones we’re cracking down on right now.
«Hí * * H< *
“[R]ight now [plaintiff is] mainly being suspended, he and [J] are suspended because on Friday they both admitted that they wrote worked together [sic] on these documents.
«Hi Hi ❖ Hi Hi
“Well see the thing is you have every right to do a petition, you know, We * * * want to get rid of Mr. Denning as principal.’ * * * [Ylou know that’s your right to do that. But *521I think where you start accusing people of being the devil, that’s where you guys crossed the line.”
We conclude that, on the record before the trial court, a disputed issue of fact exists as to whether plaintiff was suspended for conduct and not for speech. We therefore cannot affirm the trial court’s grant of summary judgment to defendant on the ground that, as a matter of law, the suspension did not implicate free speech at all.
Nonetheless, we could affirm the trial court if we could conclude that, as a matter of law, even if the suspension was speech related, the speech was unprotected. Examining that theory requires us to determine what speech in fact could have served as the basis for the suspension. In other words, to determine whether defendant acted lawfully in suspending plaintiff for his speech, we need to know the speech that defendant reacted to. The record in that regard is not clear. Denning, the principal, asserted at the meeting with plaintiff and his father that plaintiff had admitted “helping” his classmate write the petition. Denning thus concluded that, although plaintiff “didn’t actually write it, he was part of the authorship of that.” At another point, Denning stated that plaintiff and J “worked together on these documents.” Plaintiff, however, states that he merely “stood by the table” while J wrote the petition and that he also wrote down a list of synonyms for “devil”6 because the two boys did not know how to spell the word “devil” itself. Thus, at the time defendant suspended plaintiff, it was undisputed that plaintiff did not himself write the text of the petition but that he did write a list of words.
Furthermore, the dissent’s assertion to the contrary notwithstanding, the record does not disclose that the list of words was ever circulated. It is on a sheet of paper separate from the sheet declaring the teacher to be the devil, threatening to beat students who do not agree, and containing student signatures. That sheet contains the word “devil” and no synonyms. Plaintiffs list contains no signatures or anything *522else to indicate that it was circulated, and his affidavit is ambiguous.
The record, therefore, indicates that plaintiffs contribution to the petition consisted of writing the list of synonyms. The record does not demonstrate that the list was ever shown to any students, and it does not demonstrate that what was shown to students contained anything that plaintiff wrote. Put another way, a finder of fact could conclude that, at the time defendant suspended plaintiff, defendant knew only that plaintiff had provided the petition’s author with an unused and undisclosed list of synonyms for the word “devil.”
We must therefore determine whether defendant could punish plaintiff for that writing without violating his First Amendment rights. Pangle is the most instructive case. There, we held that a student’s speech, published in a newsletter, was not constitutionally protected. We summarized the circumstances under which punishment for student speech in a school setting is constitutionally permissible. Drawing together the principles announced by the United States Supreme Court in Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community School Dist., 393 US 503, 89 S Ct 733, 21 L Ed 2d 73 (1969), Bethel School Dist. No. 403 v. Fraser, 478 US 675, 106 S Ct 3159, 92 L Ed 2d 549 (1986), and Hazelwood School District v. Kuhlmeier, 484 US 260, 108 S Ct 562, 98 L Ed 2d 592 (1988), we distilled the required analysis and applied it to the speech at issue in that case:
“[W]e observe that the United States Supreme Court did not hold in Tinker, Fraser and Kuhlmeier, that the ‘protected’ or ‘unprotected’ content of the expression was the determinative issue. Bather, the Court determined whether a school district could discipline for the expression in those cases based on the interests inherent in the school’s educational mission. * * *
“Thus, the task confronting us in this case is to focus on the issue of any disruption, actual or potential, that the dissemination of [the newsletter] caused to school’s educational mission. The importance of maintaining a structured and safe environment is underscored by the compulsory nature of public education in this state. * * * When children are within the school environment, parents must rely on *523school personnel to provide a safe and non-disruptive learning environment. As the court noted in Fraser, there is an ‘obvious concern on the part of parents, and school authorities acting in loco parentis, to protect children[.]’ School personnel act in a surrogate parent role, insofar as student safety on high school campuses is concerned. Fraser, 478 US at 684. The exercise of appropriate discipline to deter disruptive forces within the school environment is as consistent with First Amendment rights as are constitutional limitations on free speech in other environments, such as constraints on yelling ‘Fire!’ in a crowded movie theater.”
Pangle, 169 Or App at 394-95. We emphasized that Supreme Court decisions permit schools to curtail not only speech that causes actual disruption but also expressive activity that carries the potential to disrupt the educational environment:
“It does not necessarily follow that expression by a student in a school environment is protected to the same extent that the expression would be protected if made by an adult in a non-school setting. Kuhlmeier, 484 US at 266; Fraser, 478 US at 682. As the Court has said, ‘[t]he undoubted freedom to advocate unpopular and controversial views in schools and classrooms must be balanced against the society’s countervailing interest in teaching students the boundaries of socially appropriate behavior.’ Fraser, 478 US at 681. For that reason, it is untenable to argue that the use of vulgar or threatening language not resulting in actual disruption is not subject to discipline. As the Court indicated in Tinker, the question is whether the expression will motivate ‘actually or potentially disruptive conduct by those participating in it.’ 393 US at 505. Finally, ‘[a] school need not tolerate student speech that is inconsistent with its ‘basic educational mission,’ even though the government could not censor similar speech outside the school.’ Kuhlmeier, 484 US at 266 (citation omitted).”
Pangle, 169 Or App at 395. Thus, summary judgment was proper in this case only if undisputed facts show that plaintiff actually contributed to the devil petition and that his contribution was disruptive or capable of causing disruption to the school’s mission of fostering a learning environment and “teaching students the boundaries of socially appropriate behavior.”7
*524We noted in Pangle that “our analysis must engage with the unique set of factual circumstances present in this case.” 169 Or App at 394. The same is true here. Whether plaintiffs speech was disruptive or capable of disruption depends on an array of considerations including the nature of the speech, its content, and the challenge it posed to the school’s interests. That analysis is heavily fact-bound. Federal case law indicates certain matters that are relevant to determining whether a student’s speech undermines the school’s educational goals. For example, the court may look to whether, by their impermissible speech, older students model behavior that contravenes the school’s interest in creating a beneficial educational environment; whether the speech is hostile or offensive to certain listeners in particular; and whether students’ reactions to the speech exacerbated its unwanted effects. See Fraser, 478 US at 682-86 (applying those considerations to determine whether, under the facts of that case, a student’s speech interfered with the work of the school or infringed on the rights of others).
From the record in the present case, we cannot determine whether plaintiffs speech, that is, the list of devil synonyms, was employed in creating the petition or circulated with it and if so, whether it was disruptive or capable of disruption under the relevant standard. The facts surrounding the nature of the petition, its authorship, and its dissemination are in dispute. Plaintiff argues that he did not compose any of the petitions, that his list of devil synonyms was separate from the petitions, and that, in any case, “there was no disruption of the school or classroom.” Defendant contends that plaintiff coauthored the devil petition and that coercion associated with plaintiff and the petition caused actual disruption, as did the uproar and investigation upon its discovery by Denning. Defendant also argues that facts in the record reflecting events that occurred after Denning discovered the petitions, including the investigation, the reported reaction of the students, and the reaction of Weinhold, amount to *525the type and quantum of disruption that justifies imposing discipline for plaintiffs speech, but disputed issues of fact prevent us from gauging the extent, if any, of plaintiffs contribution to those events and reactions.
In short, it is possible that defendant legitimately suspended plaintiff for reasons unrelated to speech; it is possible that, if defendant suspended plaintiff for speech, the suspension was lawful because plaintiffs speech was disruptive or potentially disruptive of the school environment; but, on this record, viewing the facts and inferences drawn from them in the light most favorable to plaintiff, we cannot rule out the possibility that defendant suspended plaintiff for suggesting, orally and in writing, to the author of an offensive petition, that the author substitute a synonym for the word “devil,” and that the author rejected the suggestion. For that reason, we conclude that the trial court erred in granting defendant’s motion for summary judgment insofar as it applied to plaintiffs claim for a violation of his rights under the First Amendment.
On appeal, reversed and remanded on plaintiffs 42 USC section 1983 claim for violation of his rights under the First Amendment to the United States Constitution; otherwise affirmed. Cross-appeal dismissed as moot.